Brief Intro

The view from London as the biggest sporting event in the history of Great Britain finally lands. #London2012

Friday 27 July 2012

The Friday Feeling #1

This is the Friday Feeling. The first installation of a hat-trick of features which will appear on The Search for Excellence every Friday (you guessed it) during the Olympics. Expect some astute observations, irreverent opinions and priceless nuggets of information...possibly.


A huge advertisement hoarding by the Olympic Park 




TODAY


So the day has finally arrived. The Olympics are due to officially launch this evening with Danny Boyle's much-anticipated Opening Ceremony. Although in reality the tournament is already underway as earlier this morning legally blind ( I know?!) South Korean Im Dong Hyun recorded the first world record of the tournament with the best score in the men's Archery individual ranking round at Lord's Cricket Ground, with his country also triumphing in the team ranking round and setting another world record along the way with a score of 2087 (Team GB came 8th out of 12 scoring 1994 ). The women's archers are also in action this afternoon and of course, the first round of the football tournament has already taken place, although none of the games took place in London. But tonight, approximately four billion people are expected to tune in for the much anticipated ceremony where a bunch of people will prance around a stadium for a couple of hours before somebody lights a fire. It's all very exciting. But what does everyone else think?


THE MOOD


How else to judge the mood of the public than with the instant opinion generator that is known as Twitter.It's a pretty mixed bag of thoughts judging by the following:


It must be noted that this first girl is a 16-year-old Australian who is a self-confessed One Direction fan.

This girl from Surrey is certainly getting into it...

As is this fellow from Dover...






This man from Cornwall is clearly not at all interested.





Whereas this woman from Kent is clearly over the moon! Not exactly sure what 'me my pants' is meant to mean though.




Judging by the 60,000 who turned up in Hyde Park for the torch relay and the huge numbers expected to be watching tonight, it does seem that the overall mood is of excitement and anticipation. So what could possibly go wrong?!


THE BLUNDERS


Well already there has been a couple of high profile cock-ups. The worst being the mix-up of the North Korean and South Korean flags on the big screens at Hampden Park ahead of North Korea's women's football match with Colombia. Such an amateur mistake, with the two flags hardly being similar (see picture below) is inexcusable at an event as high-profile as the Olympics and the North Koreans are not exactly the sort to take it lightly. In fact it is believed that the women storming off the pitch in protest was as much due to their fear of getting into trouble with North Korean authorities as it was down to their being genuinely offended. This was followed up yesterday with the official match program at the Team GB vs Senegal men's football game listing Welsh midfielder Joe Allen as being English. While this is a less serious offence, it would certainly have irked many Welshman, including those within the Welsh FA who were hardly receptive to the idea of their Welsh footballers competing under the guise of Team GB. Yet another blunder has occurred at the Westfield shopping centre, next to the Olympic Park, where 'Welcome' has been written in many different languages but the Arabic version was written backwards rendering it illegible. The irony is that Westfield is in the borough of Newham, which happens to be the UK's most multi-lingual region. Oh dear.


Quite a difference...The North Korea flag is on the left




THE QUESTION


The big one today has to be, who is going to have the privilege of becoming the final torchbearer and light the flame in the cauldron at the Olympic Stadium tonight? In recent weeks it has looked like a two-horse race between Sir Steve Redgrave, the legendary Olympian who won a gold medal rowing at every Olympics from 1984 to 2000, and Sir Roger Bannister, the now 83-year-old who ran the first sub four-minute mile back in 1954. However, this morning the odds on Daniel Craig, the current James Bond actor who is set to be involved in the Opening Ceremony tonight, have dropped rapidly to 3/1 at the time of writing. David Beckham, controversially omitted from Team GB's football squad remains in the running as does the Queen, whose odds have also dropped overnight and are now at 6/1. Whoever does step up tonight is certainly going to be winning some people a fair bit of money.


The Queen and Daniel Craig, two of the contenders to light the torch




THE VILLAIN


Whoever was behind the Korean flag blunder could be a contender for this accolade, as could Phillips Idowu, the triple jumper who seems bizarrely adverse to complying with the BOA and the rest of Team GB. But head and shoulders above the rest is Voula Papachristou. The Greek triple jumper has been expelled from the Olympics by the Greek Olympic Committee after making a racist joke on Twitter. Following reports of mosquitoes in her home country carrying the West Nile virus, the 23-year-old tweeted, 'With so many Africans in Greece, at least the West Nile Mosquitoes will eat home made food!' She later apologised but the damage had been done and the Greek authorities said her tweet was 'contrary to the values and ideas of the Olympic movement.' The tweet was clearly tasteless, offensive and unnecessary so it is not surprising that the Greeks have now banned all their athletes from tweeting opinions during the Olympics. Is it really that hard not to say something stupid? Apparently so.


Papachristou will not be gracing the sandpits of London this year




THE SUPERHERO


Who else but Bradley Wiggins, who has handed Team GB a huge boost going into London 2012, by conquering the Tour de France last weekend. The first ever Brit to win the famed road cycling tournament, he has his eyes set on gold in the Time Trial next Wednesday. Before that he will be competing in the Road Race tomorrow, although he will be focused on helping his Team Sky and Team GB team-mate Mark Cavendish to gold, even if the two don't always see eye-to-eye. If Cavendish, the sprint-specialist from the Isle of Man and mod-loving Wiggins bring home the medals then 2012 will surely go down as the very greatest year for British Cycling. A golden era may well be upon us.


Wiggins, right, will be assisting Cavendish, in tomorrow's Road Race

From today The Search for Excellence will be posting articles daily for the duration of London 2012! Come back tomorrow for some Road Cycling fun and don't forget to follow James on Twitter @TSFE2012

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